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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67496 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67496)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Over the Wire, by Eugene Jones
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Over the Wire
-
-Author: Eugene Jones
-
-Release Date: February 25, 2022 [eBook #67496]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Roger Frank and Sue Clark. This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive.
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OVER THE WIRE ***
-
-
- Over the Wire
-
- By Eugene Jones
-
-
-Snow and ice on that mountain. Nothing but snow. The wind drove it
-with a howl against the windows, where it stuck on the warm panes.
-Sometimes I could just make out the blur of the semaphore lights and
-sometimes I couldn’t. All day the blizzard had dumped its swirling
-load about us, and now, when night closed down, the storm took the
-tower in its teeth, shaking it like you’ve seen a dog shake a rat.
-
-Oh, we were warm and cozy enough with our stove red hot. Which was
-more than Donaldson, the agent at Hastings, could say. His wire talk
-was rotten, chattery, and he told us he’d run out of coal. Looked like
-he’d freeze to death, according to him. But Big Ben prophesied grimly
-that Donaldson could take care of himself, so we might as well save
-our worries.
-
-I don’t suppose you ever heard of Big Ben, but that is your loss.
-Every soul on the Mountain Division knew him. His Morse snapped out
-like a track torpedo, fast, too, but accurate, staccato, with a smooth
-flow as if a machine had hold of the key. Dots and dashes were part of
-him, for, after years of it, he could express himself better that way.
-
-Sort of feeling for the language, I suppose. I’ve seen the same gift
-since, but never to the extent Ben possessed it. Why, he could come
-mighty close to telling the color of your eyes over a telegraph-wire.
-
-He and I had worked tower BB-17 on the Mountain Division for three
-years, and during that time I never saw him flurried. Once a freight,
-running extra, got by us—dispatcher tangled up his train-sheet. Forty
-minutes later a relay came into stop her or she’d meet 87 on the big
-grade.
-
-It takes just forty minutes to run from our tower to Hastings, further
-down the line. Hastings is the last station with a siding before the
-grade. In other words, the freight ought to have been getting her O.
-K. from Hastings right then.
-
-Was Ben excited? Not one little bit.
-
-Donaldson caught his first call. Clear as a bell it was. And Donaldson
-had time to flag the freight.
-
-But the particular night I’m speaking of, my side partner appeared a
-bit uneasy, which was enough to set my think-tank working. He’d drop
-down alongside the key for a moment; then he’d wander over to the
-windows, trying to pierce the blizzard.
-
-He was a big man with a hearty laugh and a mouth full of teeth and a
-whiskered chin full of determination. His red hair, as brilliant as
-the glow in his corn-cob pipe, usually stood on end. But his eyes were
-gray and pleasant; that is, generally they were. Yet I’ve noticed ’em
-hard as rocks, drilling into you with a gleam in ’em like you see
-jumping across a spark-gap. Right now they were anxious.
-
-Perhaps that wasn’t so strange, either, for all day long, from the
-length of the division, had come bunches of trouble. A snowshed out
-here; a freight ditched there; hell to pay everywhere.
-
-Wires were down, too. Not a word could we get below Hastings or north
-of the junction. Toward night every siding was overflowing with
-deadheaded rolling stock. You see, the big grade—it’s four and a half
-per cent in places—handicaps us because even our best oil-burners
-won’t haul much tonnage on it in a blizzard. They can’t make steam.
-
-And this particular frolic of the elements promised to beat anything
-that had struck us in twenty years. At 10 P.M. the chief dispatcher
-ordered the line cleared for the night, barring No. 77 southbound,
-which was to make her run as usual. I reckon you’ve heard of that
-train—the Cumberland Limited, all steel and solid Pullman? She was to
-follow a snow-plow, and headquarters gossip filtering to us hinted she
-might find the blizzard a bit of a teaser.
-
-Suddenly Big Ben turned on me. “Jim,” said he, “I don’t like it.
-What’s the old man thinking of to let 77 through? Have you heard what
-she’s carrying to-night?”
-
-I allowed I hadn’t.
-
-“Well, there’s something like one hundred thousand in gold in her
-express-car. Government consignment. I got it straight. What a chance
-for a hold-up! Remember that cut below Hastings?” He shook his massive
-head dubiously. “It’s been done before.”
-
-As if to emphasize his words, the storm swooped down with renewed
-energy until the tower swayed like a lighthouse. Great guns! how the
-wind shrieked at us. How the snow thudded against the windows. And
-when you _hear_ snow, you know there’s a double-headed gale behind it.
-
-About that time our call came over the wire: “N-H, N-H, N-H.”
-
-As Ben jumped in, I put down my paper to listen. I find it’s a good
-thing to pay pretty strict attention to anything on a night like that.
-It keeps you from seeing shadows that aren’t there, and hearing sounds
-which your common sense tells you must be the wind.
-
-Presently came the professional dot and dash of Donaldson down at
-Hastings. Now Donaldson, next to Big Ben, was a star operator, and the
-two of ’em could talk better and with more satisfaction over a stretch
-of singing wire than if they were sitting together in a parlor.
-
-Even _I_ knew Donaldson’s style, although I wasn’t more than middling
-expert. There were tricks in his stuff such as shortening his o’s, but
-his Morse ran mighty smooth. I read off the message to myself.
-
-“Freezing cold down here, Ben. Lonely, too. Damn lonely. What do you
-get on 77?”
-
-The big man at the table cut in: “Brace up; 77 on time. Nothing to
-bother her to-night except the storm. All freight deadheaded.”
-
-That seemed to satisfy Donaldson, for there was a long silence broken
-only by the whine of the wind and the _thud_, _thud_ of driven snow. I
-had just picked up the paper again when “N-H, N-H, N-H,” snapped at
-us.
-
-The crispness of dots and dashes suggested excitement. Ben
-acknowledged deliberately, but when he closed the wire I saw a
-narrowing of his eyes.
-
-Donaldson was in a hurry. “Going to quit to-morrow,” he began. “Can’t
-stand this joint. Say, there’s two of you up there. You’re lucky. Old
-man will have to come across with an assistant or I quit. Do you know
-you’re the nearest white man to me? Just me alone here. No night for a
-man to be alone. Hold on, I think I hear somebody in the waiting-room.
-Maybe I’ll have company.”
-
-But he opened up again the next moment with: “Good Lord, must be going
-off my nut. Nobody in the waiting-room. It’s the wind. I tell you this
-place is like the north pole. If I could only hear a fire crackling.
-Say, there it goes again. No, I’m way off; that’s a fact. I’ll have to
-look around. Do you notice anything funny in the wind? I seem to. Why
-the devil didn’t they put shades on these windows? What’s the matter
-with me anyhow?”
-
-Ben went back at him, calm as a summer’s day. “Hold on, old man; take
-some whisky. It’s your nerves. Get a grip on yourself.”
-
-“All right,” answered Donaldson, his wire-talk becoming calmer. “Yes,
-I’ll take the whisky. Let me know about 77.”
-
-That was all for a while, but Ben eyed me through the fumes of his
-pipe. “I don’t like it,” he muttered. “Not a bit. Never knew Donaldson
-to wildcat before. Wonder if there _is_ anything wrong?”
-
-I didn’t say what was on my mind, for the shriek of the storm
-interrupted. So we just sat still and looked at each other and
-wondered what it would be like if either of _us_ weren’t there.
-
-Somehow I couldn’t get rid of the picture of Hastings station—a little
-frame building backed up against a cliff, with a siding cutting in
-behind it and the banked curve of the main line stretching away before
-it. A few farmers used the station, but a water-tank was its real
-excuse for existence.
-
-I could see how the snow had half-buried it, and how Donaldson,
-veteran that he was, might hear strange sounds in the gale. I could
-see a great many things right then, but the sight wasn’t pleasant.
-
-Snow, snow and more snow, and icy rails and low, hurrying clouds you
-felt were brushing against the tower. “Listen!” I snapped.
-
-Ben jumped to his feet. “This won’t do. Here, you quit listening or
-you’ll be as bad as Donaldson.” Then he came over to me. “I guess it’s
-just as well there’re two of us,” he said very quietly. “Try the
-junction for a report on 77.”
-
-I took the key with a sense of awe—only a couple of slim wires between
-us and the world, and a thousand chances for the storm to tear ’em
-down. But if we felt it, what about Donaldson? What about Donaldson,
-anyway?
-
-The junction answered after a bit, though there was no life in the
-sending. “McFlin,” nodded Ben. “I know his style. Ask him whether the
-orders for 77 stand.”
-
-I did.
-
-“Sure,” clicked McFlin; “77 on time. Pass her through. Rotten night,
-isn’t it? They got a plow leading the limited like a blind baby.
-So-long.”
-
-That was at eleven two. Twenty minutes later Donaldson started after
-us again, but it was a chattering, wild Donaldson; a new Donaldson who
-tumbled his letters over each other.
-
-“N-H, N-H, N-H,” he stuttered, even after I had opened the wire. “N-H,
-N-H.”
-
-I sent him a string of Rs a mile long before he acknowledged. Then:
-
-“What’s the matter with you up there?” he clicked. “Gone to sleep? But
-you can’t sleep now; you’ve got to talk to me or I’ll be ready for the
-queer house. Something is walking up and down outside my window. I’ve
-seen it twice. It can’t be a man, and animals don’t prowl about in a
-storm like this. Listen to that wind. I tell you it’s walking around
-the station. What am I saying? Do you believe in ghosts? It was in the
-waiting-room a while back, but it got out before I had a shot at it.
-What would you do if you were down here alone, snowed in like a damned
-Eskimo? What would you do if it started to walk—”
-
-Big Ben strode across the room. “Give me the key,” he thundered. His
-eyes were hard gray now, like rock, with little points of fire in
-them, and it seemed he would smash the instrument as he crashed down
-with Donaldson’s call.
-
-“Stop that!” went the dots and dashes, clear cut, fast, but Lordy,
-they had a punch behind ’em. “Pull yourself together. Take some more
-whisky. Wake up. Remember you’re an operator. You’ve got to handle the
-Limited to-night. No more of that. You know damn well nothing is
-walking around down there except you. Rub some snow in your face. Wake
-up, I say. I’ll talk to you as much as you like, but no more spook
-stuff.”
-
-“You’re right,” came the slower response. “I won’t bother you any
-more. Nevertheless, it’s walking around here. Maybe I’ll get a shot at
-it. I’ll let you know if I do.”
-
-That was all, and Ben and I looked across the table into each other’s
-eyes. “Well?” I questioned.
-
-He shook himself as if trying to get rid of something clinging. “Oh,
-Donaldson is getting old,” he muttered. “It’s lonely down there, and
-his fire’s out. That’s what I make of it.
-
-“When the wind howls, and you’re on a night shift in a God-forsaken
-spot like Hastings, you’re mighty apt to hear and see a little more
-’an you’ve any business to.”
-
-The next word that came flashing over the wire left no doubt in our
-minds. Either Donaldson was clean crazy or—well, he _must_ be crazy!
-
-“Ever see a face half black and half white?” stuttered our instrument.
-“I had a shot at it. It’s still walking.”
-
-Ben waited an instant then sent “J-J,” Donaldson’s call, steady for
-three minutes. But he might as well have opened the window and yelled
-out into the storm. The wire was either dead or Hastings wouldn’t
-answer.
-
-Presently McFlin at the junction got busy. “Just O. K.’d 77,” he said.
-“Devilish night. The Limited looked like a hunk of the mountain on
-wheels. Bet the snow on the car-roofs gets scraped off on the top of
-the tunnels. Happy dreams.”
-
-But we weren’t to indulge in any happy dreams for some time to come.
-Hardly had McFlin shut up when “N-H, N-H, N-H” called Ben back.
-“Lord,” he groaned, “hear that style? It’s Donaldson, but what’s
-happened to him? I hate to listen to it.”
-
-Dull, lifeless, flat, came the dots and dashes from Hastings. “No
-use,” clicked Donaldson. “This hide-and-seek is beyond me. Its face is
-half black and half white, and bullets don’t worry it. I’m a gone
-duck. Never mind me. Anyhow, hell is warm and not as lonesome as this.
-I’m freezing, and that’s no ghost story.”
-
-“For God’s sake,” Ben’s reply flew forth, “can that stuff. Pull
-yourself together, old man. Forget the face or whatever it is; 77’s on
-time. Hold hard.”
-
-“Sure,” agreed Donaldson wearily, “I’ll handle the Limited. How’s the
-storm up there?”
-
-“Quitting,” lied Ben, and went to the window.
-
-Then followed an hour of silence, with only the shriek of the wind and
-the thud of snow. I reckon the two of us smoked considerable tobacco
-during that hour, and we played a few games of checkers, too, but our
-minds wandered.
-
-When at last we heard the shrill squeal of 77’s whistle above the
-noise of the blizzard, we felt happy. Just to know there were other
-people near us—believe me, that was some relief!
-
-Far off up the line we could make out the headlight of the Limited
-like a blinking, misty moon creeping toward us. Ben glanced at his
-semaphore levers. Down she bore on us, the din of her drivers muffled
-by snow.
-
-There was the thunder of moving tons, a blast of cinders against the
-tower windows, and a snaky line of black as the Pullmans flashed past
-under their white-caps. We watched her red tail-lights around the
-curve.
-
-“J-J, J-J, J-J,” clicked Ben, back at the table. And directly Hastings
-answered in the same lifeless style.
-
-“Limited just passed O. K.,” went on my side partner. “How are you
-feeling?”
-
-Donaldson’s wire-talk was worse than ever. “Fine,” he stuttered.
-“Maybe I can hold out. The damn thing’s always near me. It’s cold
-here. I’ve got my feet on the stove. Say, this stove is a joke. It’s
-so empty it’s going to cave in pretty soon. Wait a minute, let me try
-another shot.”
-
-Nothing more. Not another word, though we took turns at the key. And
-when Ben relighted his pipe I didn’t like the look on his face. “Jim,”
-he began, “there’s things in this world none of us can understand. I
-reckon after all that maybe, I misjudged Donaldson; perhaps he’s up
-against one of ’em.”
-
-“Quit!” I bellowed. “You watch yourself or you’ll be splitting a
-switch, too. As you said a while back, Donaldson’s nervous and cold.
-That’s what’s the matter with him; nothing else.”
-
-Ben, mumbling a reply, turned again to the window. If possible the
-storm was worse.
-
-I don’t exactly remember how it happened; I must have dozed off about
-then, being pretty tuckered out. Anyhow, the first thing I knew Ben
-was shaking the life out of me. I’ll never forget the expression of
-his face as I opened my eyes.
-
-His eyes were all red, his hands were working, his jaw set. “Wake up,
-Jim,” he hissed. “I heard it, too.
-
-“No,” he went on as I instinctively looked toward the window. “Not
-there; over the wire. Listen!”
-
-I listened, but for a long time nothing broke the vibrating stillness
-of the tower. And I got to thinking it was another case of nerves.
-Then, Father above us! may I never again hear such a sound!
-
-Our instrument started to whisper. You laugh, do you? But if you’d
-been there you wouldn’t have laughed. We went over to the table on
-tiptoe, hardly daring to breathe. The little steel bar trembled; moved
-down; snapped back, barely closing the contact.
-
-It was like a dying man framing words he couldn’t utter. I followed in
-my mind the course of the single, drumming wire over the trestles,
-through the ravines, under the mountains. What manner of thing was
-pressing the key at the other end?
-
-Ben dropped forward with an oath and pillowed his elbows on the table
-as if his nearness might aid him. “Listen!” he begged. “Oh, Jim,
-_listen_!”
-
-Presently the instrument quivered again, but this time the impulse was
-stronger. Horribly flaccid, monotonously regular, like the labored
-effort of an amateur, came the message which shall forever sear my
-memory with unspeakable horror.
-
-“God—in—heaven—help me. I—can’t—stand—this. They—chained—cross—
-ties—to—the—rails. They—will—ditch—the—Limited. I’m—done—for.
-Hell—is—nearer—now. Help. Dear—God—help—me—”
-
-That was all. Ben tore at the key, sending out into the night, “J-J,
-J-J, J-J,” until my head swam.
-
-But no response came; not the least flutter. Only agonizing, storm
-shrieking silence.
-
-Then he gave it up and staggered to his feet. His face was as gray as
-slate. “Jim,” he gasped, “Donaldson is dead! I know it. It was a dying
-man who sent that message.”
-
-I grabbed him by the shoulders. “You fool!” I yelled. “He can’t be
-dead—he sent it. Don’t you understand? They’re going to wreck the
-Limited. Donaldson was telling us. He _may_ be wounded. We’ve got to
-get to him.”
-
-Slowly, as if his body was awakening from sleep, the muscles in his
-shoulders under my hand tightened. “Sure, I get you,” he whispered.
-And before I knew what he was doing, he shook me off, rushing blindly
-for the stairs. “Come on, Jim. For God’s sake, hurry!” he called.
-“Bring my gun and some torpedoes. It’s only five miles by the road;
-thirty down the mountain by the track. Let’s try the car—”
-
-I stopped long enough to be sure the revolver we kept in a drawer was
-loaded, stuffed some torpedoes in my pocket, and followed him. Out
-into the gale he sped to where he kept his little second-hand,
-mud-spattered gas-wagon. I had always kidded him about it, laughed at
-it; but now I prayed.
-
-Yes, funny when you think of it, me praying! But I did—prayed it would
-run; prayed there was gas and oil in it.
-
-Once away from the lee of the building, the storm wrapped around us,
-flinging the snow in our faces, making us gasp for breath. We were
-taking desperate chances and breaking all rules—this leaving a tower
-vacant, but what could we do? What in God’s name could we do?
-
-When I caught up with Ben he was cranking the engine desperately. I
-propped the shanty door open, though the blast of wind threatened to
-fairly tear it from its hinges.
-
-Fortunately the radiator of the car had antifreezing mixture in it.
-After an agonizing moment, the engine gave a couple of disgusted
-coughs and died. But Ben went right on. He spun that thing till I was
-dizzy as I sat with my hand on the throttle, feeding it raw gas.
-
-When there seemed no chance left, and I could see the Limited a
-burning, blackened mass, and hear the cries of the injured, the engine
-started, missing like thunder, to be sure. Ben leaped in beside me and
-let in his clutch.
-
-Once beyond the shanty our headlights ended in a whirling bank of
-snow, and the cold stabbed like a driven nail. But the engine was
-running better now.
-
-How my side partner found the road, or how he kept that rickety piece
-of junk from chucking us down a ravine I’ll never know. But he did.
-Yes, by the grace of the Lord, he did.
-
-Pitching like a ship in a storm, sinking now and then up to our hubs,
-we jounced on down that mountain. What everlasting miles of emptiness!
-What biting pain as our ears and hands and noses turned red, then
-white.
-
-Once we heard the shriek of the Limited below us on the grade; once we
-saw the flash of her furnace door. Seconds turned into minutes;
-minutes into hours. Would we be in time? I set my teeth and prayed
-some more.
-
-Ah, we had hit the last stretch and through the smother we could see
-the semaphore lights of Hastings station. Also the light in the
-building itself. Our car snorted and groaned as Ben fed it the gas,
-skidding to the edge of a precipice or flinging us half out of our
-seats, but we never thought of that.
-
-And now came the wail of the Limited’s whistle, this time above us.
-Her headlight flickered across the cut, touching the station with
-uncertain fingers. The semaphore was set green.
-
-I shivered, but not from cold. If only we had half a chance, but the
-everlasting snow—how it clung to our wheels! And under it our
-tire-chains spun gratingly in red clay which flecked the white of the
-road like blood.
-
-Bearing down on Hastings station, gathering speed with each pound of
-her drivers, thundered the Limited. We were playing the passage of a
-minute against a pile of cross-ties—and the forfeit was death!
-
-Now we reached the nearest point to the right-of-way, and as we jerked
-to a halt, a black figure appeared on the depot platform against the
-light. I saw the flash of a gun and heard a bullet sing past.
-
-But Ben paid no heed. Throwing himself from the car, he floundered
-over to the track. I ran toward the station, firing as I went. Once I
-looked back. Ben was kneeling down, adjusting torpedoes under the very
-pilot of the plow.
-
-Now there isn’t any use of my explaining how the Limited roared by,
-her engineer satisfied with the green of the semaphore; nor how he
-gave her the air when the torpedoes warned him.
-
-Nor, for that matter, of the futile pursuit of the bandits who had
-intended to ditch her. All that came out in the morning paper. If I
-remember, there was even a picture of the pile of cross-ties chained
-to the track.
-
-The fact that will interest you is what we discovered in Hastings
-station. Without bothering to explain to 77’s wondering crew, we
-dashed into the waiting-room and threw open the door of the ticket
-office.
-
-At the table sat Donaldson. He was stiff and rigid, and from an ugly
-blotched hole in his neck there crept a frozen stream of blood. His
-right hand still rested on the telegraph-key.
-
-“Good God!” I muttered. “Dead! He never moved after he was shot.”
-
-And then, somehow feeling Ben’s eyes upon me, I looked at him. His
-smile was ghastly.
-
-“Sure?” he said. “I told you so back in the tower. He never moved
-after he was shot? Then what about that message? How did he know about
-the cross-ties?”
-
-“Shut up!” I shrieked. “Here, let’s get him out of this. We’ll go down
-on 77. I’m through!”
-
-
-[Transcriber’s Note: This story appeared in the January 31, 1920 issue
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- <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Over the Wire, by Eugene Jones</title>
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Over the Wire, by Eugene Jones</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Over the Wire</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Eugene Jones</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 25, 2022 [eBook #67496]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Roger Frank and Sue Clark. This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive.</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OVER THE WIRE ***</div>
-<div class='ce'>
-<h1 style='margin-bottom:0em;'>Over the Wire </h1>
-<div style='font-size:1.1em;margin-bottom:2em;'>By Eugene Jones </div>
-</div>
-<div id='i001' class='mt01 mb01 wi001'>
- <img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-</div>
-<p>Snow and ice on that mountain. Nothing but snow. The wind drove it
-with a howl against the windows, where it stuck on the warm panes.
-Sometimes I could just make out the blur of the semaphore lights and
-sometimes I couldn’t. All day the blizzard had dumped its swirling
-load about us, and now, when night closed down, the storm took the
-tower in its teeth, shaking it like you’ve seen a dog shake a rat.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, we were warm and cozy enough with our stove red hot. Which was
-more than Donaldson, the agent at Hastings, could say. His wire talk
-was rotten, chattery, and he told us he’d run out of coal. Looked like
-he’d freeze to death, according to him. But Big Ben prophesied grimly
-that Donaldson could take care of himself, so we might as well save
-our worries.</p>
-
-<p>I don’t suppose you ever heard of Big Ben, but that is your loss.
-Every soul on the Mountain Division knew him. His Morse snapped out
-like a track torpedo, fast, too, but accurate, staccato, with a smooth
-flow as if a machine had hold of the key. Dots and dashes were part of
-him, for, after years of it, he could express himself better that way.</p>
-
-<p>Sort of feeling for the language, I suppose. I’ve seen the same gift
-since, but never to the extent Ben possessed it. Why, he could come
-mighty close to telling the color of your eyes over a telegraph-wire.</p>
-
-<p>He and I had worked tower BB-17 on the Mountain Division for three
-years, and during that time I never saw him flurried. Once a freight,
-running extra, got by us—dispatcher tangled up his train-sheet. Forty
-minutes later a relay came into stop her or she’d meet 87 on the big
-grade.</p>
-
-<p>It takes just forty minutes to run from our tower to Hastings, further
-down the line. Hastings is the last station with a siding before the
-grade. In other words, the freight ought to have been getting her O.
-K. from Hastings right then.</p>
-
-<p>Was Ben excited? Not one little bit.</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson caught his first call. Clear as a bell it was. And Donaldson
-had time to flag the freight.</p>
-
-<p>But the particular night I’m speaking of, my side partner appeared a
-bit uneasy, which was enough to set my think-tank working. He’d drop
-down alongside the key for a moment; then he’d wander over to the
-windows, trying to pierce the blizzard.</p>
-
-<p>He was a big man with a hearty laugh and a mouth full of teeth and a
-whiskered chin full of determination. His red hair, as brilliant as
-the glow in his corn-cob pipe, usually stood on end. But his eyes were
-gray and pleasant; that is, generally they were. Yet I’ve noticed ’em
-hard as rocks, drilling into you with a gleam in ’em like you see
-jumping across a spark-gap. Right now they were anxious.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps that wasn’t so strange, either, for all day long, from the
-length of the division, had come bunches of trouble. A snowshed out
-here; a freight ditched there; hell to pay everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>Wires were down, too. Not a word could we get below Hastings or north
-of the junction. Toward night every siding was overflowing with
-deadheaded rolling stock. You see, the big grade—it’s four and a half
-per cent in places—handicaps us because even our best oil-burners
-won’t haul much tonnage on it in a blizzard. They can’t make steam.</p>
-
-<p>And this particular frolic of the elements promised to beat anything
-that had struck us in twenty years. At 10 P.M. the chief dispatcher
-ordered the line cleared for the night, barring No. 77 southbound,
-which was to make her run as usual. I reckon you’ve heard of that
-train—the Cumberland Limited, all steel and solid Pullman? She was to
-follow a snow-plow, and headquarters gossip filtering to us hinted she
-might find the blizzard a bit of a teaser.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Big Ben turned on me. “Jim,” said he, “I don’t like it.
-What’s the old man thinking of to let 77 through? Have you heard what
-she’s carrying to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>I allowed I hadn’t.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there’s something like one hundred thousand in gold in her
-express-car. Government consignment. I got it straight. What a chance
-for a hold-up! Remember that cut below Hastings?” He shook his massive
-head dubiously. “It’s been done before.”</p>
-
-<p>As if to emphasize his words, the storm swooped down with renewed
-energy until the tower swayed like a lighthouse. Great guns! how the
-wind shrieked at us. How the snow thudded against the windows. And
-when you <i>hear</i> snow, you know there’s a double-headed gale behind it.</p>
-
-<p>About that time our call came over the wire: “N-H, N-H, N-H.”</p>
-
-<p>As Ben jumped in, I put down my paper to listen. I find it’s a good
-thing to pay pretty strict attention to anything on a night like that.
-It keeps you from seeing shadows that aren’t there, and hearing sounds
-which your common sense tells you must be the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Presently came the professional dot and dash of Donaldson down at
-Hastings. Now Donaldson, next to Big Ben, was a star operator, and the
-two of ’em could talk better and with more satisfaction over a stretch
-of singing wire than if they were sitting together in a parlor.</p>
-
-<p>Even <i>I</i> knew Donaldson’s style, although I wasn’t more than middling
-expert. There were tricks in his stuff such as shortening his o’s, but
-his Morse ran mighty smooth. I read off the message to myself.</p>
-
-<p>“Freezing cold down here, Ben. Lonely, too. Damn lonely. What do you
-get on 77?”</p>
-
-<p>The big man at the table cut in: “Brace up; 77 on time. Nothing to
-bother her to-night except the storm. All freight deadheaded.”</p>
-
-<p>That seemed to satisfy Donaldson, for there was a long silence broken
-only by the whine of the wind and the <i>thud</i>, <i>thud</i> of driven snow. I
-had just picked up the paper again when “N-H, N-H, N-H,” snapped at
-us.</p>
-
-<p>The crispness of dots and dashes suggested excitement. Ben
-acknowledged deliberately, but when he closed the wire I saw a
-narrowing of his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson was in a hurry. “Going to quit to-morrow,” he began. “Can’t
-stand this joint. Say, there’s two of you up there. You’re lucky. Old
-man will have to come across with an assistant or I quit. Do you know
-you’re the nearest white man to me? Just me alone here. No night for a
-man to be alone. Hold on, I think I hear somebody in the waiting-room.
-Maybe I’ll have company.”</p>
-
-<p>But he opened up again the next moment with: “Good Lord, must be going
-off my nut. Nobody in the waiting-room. It’s the wind. I tell you this
-place is like the north pole. If I could only hear a fire crackling.
-Say, there it goes again. No, I’m way off; that’s a fact. I’ll have to
-look around. Do you notice anything funny in the wind? I seem to. Why
-the devil didn’t they put shades on these windows? What’s the matter
-with me anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>Ben went back at him, calm as a summer’s day. “Hold on, old man; take
-some whisky. It’s your nerves. Get a grip on yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” answered Donaldson, his wire-talk becoming calmer. “Yes,
-I’ll take the whisky. Let me know about 77.”</p>
-
-<p>That was all for a while, but Ben eyed me through the fumes of his
-pipe. “I don’t like it,” he muttered. “Not a bit. Never knew Donaldson
-to wildcat before. Wonder if there <i>is</i> anything wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t say what was on my mind, for the shriek of the storm
-interrupted. So we just sat still and looked at each other and
-wondered what it would be like if either of <i>us</i> weren’t there.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow I couldn’t get rid of the picture of Hastings station—a little
-frame building backed up against a cliff, with a siding cutting in
-behind it and the banked curve of the main line stretching away before
-it. A few farmers used the station, but a water-tank was its real
-excuse for existence.</p>
-
-<p>I could see how the snow had half-buried it, and how Donaldson,
-veteran that he was, might hear strange sounds in the gale. I could
-see a great many things right then, but the sight wasn’t pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>Snow, snow and more snow, and icy rails and low, hurrying clouds you
-felt were brushing against the tower. “Listen!” I snapped.</p>
-
-<p>Ben jumped to his feet. “This won’t do. Here, you quit listening or
-you’ll be as bad as Donaldson.” Then he came over to me. “I guess it’s
-just as well there’re two of us,” he said very quietly. “Try the
-junction for a report on 77.”</p>
-
-<p>I took the key with a sense of awe—only a couple of slim wires between
-us and the world, and a thousand chances for the storm to tear ’em
-down. But if we felt it, what about Donaldson? What about Donaldson,
-anyway?</p>
-
-<p>The junction answered after a bit, though there was no life in the
-sending. “McFlin,” nodded Ben. “I know his style. Ask him whether the
-orders for 77 stand.”</p>
-
-<p>I did.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” clicked McFlin; “77 on time. Pass her through. Rotten night,
-isn’t it? They got a plow leading the limited like a blind baby.
-So-long.”</p>
-
-<p>That was at eleven two. Twenty minutes later Donaldson started after
-us again, but it was a chattering, wild Donaldson; a new Donaldson who
-tumbled his letters over each other.</p>
-
-<p>“N-H, N-H, N-H,” he stuttered, even after I had opened the wire. “N-H,
-N-H.”</p>
-
-<p>I sent him a string of Rs a mile long before he acknowledged. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you up there?” he clicked. “Gone to sleep? But
-you can’t sleep now; you’ve got to talk to me or I’ll be ready for the
-queer house. Something is walking up and down outside my window. I’ve
-seen it twice. It can’t be a man, and animals don’t prowl about in a
-storm like this. Listen to that wind. I tell you it’s walking around
-the station. What am I saying? Do you believe in ghosts? It was in the
-waiting-room a while back, but it got out before I had a shot at it.
-What would you do if you were down here alone, snowed in like a damned
-Eskimo? What would you do if it started to walk—”</p>
-
-<p>Big Ben strode across the room. “Give me the key,” he thundered. His
-eyes were hard gray now, like rock, with little points of fire in
-them, and it seemed he would smash the instrument as he crashed down
-with Donaldson’s call.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop that!” went the dots and dashes, clear cut, fast, but Lordy,
-they had a punch behind ’em. “Pull yourself together. Take some more
-whisky. Wake up. Remember you’re an operator. You’ve got to handle the
-Limited to-night. No more of that. You know damn well nothing is
-walking around down there except you. Rub some snow in your face. Wake
-up, I say. I’ll talk to you as much as you like, but no more spook
-stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right,” came the slower response. “I won’t bother you any
-more. Nevertheless, it’s walking around here. Maybe I’ll get a shot at
-it. I’ll let you know if I do.”</p>
-
-<p>That was all, and Ben and I looked across the table into each other’s
-eyes. “Well?” I questioned.</p>
-
-<p>He shook himself as if trying to get rid of something clinging. “Oh,
-Donaldson is getting old,” he muttered. “It’s lonely down there, and
-his fire’s out. That’s what I make of it.</p>
-
-<p>“When the wind howls, and you’re on a night shift in a God-forsaken
-spot like Hastings, you’re mighty apt to hear and see a little more
-’an you’ve any business to.”</p>
-
-<p>The next word that came flashing over the wire left no doubt in our
-minds. Either Donaldson was clean crazy or—well, he <i>must</i> be crazy!</p>
-
-<p>“Ever see a face half black and half white?” stuttered our instrument.
-“I had a shot at it. It’s still walking.”</p>
-
-<p>Ben waited an instant then sent “J-J,” Donaldson’s call, steady for
-three minutes. But he might as well have opened the window and yelled
-out into the storm. The wire was either dead or Hastings wouldn’t
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>Presently McFlin at the junction got busy. “Just O. K.’d 77,” he said.
-“Devilish night. The Limited looked like a hunk of the mountain on
-wheels. Bet the snow on the car-roofs gets scraped off on the top of
-the tunnels. Happy dreams.”</p>
-
-<p>But we weren’t to indulge in any happy dreams for some time to come.
-Hardly had McFlin shut up when “N-H, N-H, N-H” called Ben back.
-“Lord,” he groaned, “hear that style? It’s Donaldson, but what’s
-happened to him? I hate to listen to it.”</p>
-
-<p>Dull, lifeless, flat, came the dots and dashes from Hastings. “No
-use,” clicked Donaldson. “This hide-and-seek is beyond me. Its face is
-half black and half white, and bullets don’t worry it. I’m a gone
-duck. Never mind me. Anyhow, hell is warm and not as lonesome as this.
-I’m freezing, and that’s no ghost story.”</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake,” Ben’s reply flew forth, “can that stuff. Pull
-yourself together, old man. Forget the face or whatever it is; 77’s on
-time. Hold hard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” agreed Donaldson wearily, “I’ll handle the Limited. How’s the
-storm up there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quitting,” lied Ben, and went to the window.</p>
-
-<p>Then followed an hour of silence, with only the shriek of the wind and
-the thud of snow. I reckon the two of us smoked considerable tobacco
-during that hour, and we played a few games of checkers, too, but our
-minds wandered.</p>
-
-<p>When at last we heard the shrill squeal of 77’s whistle above the
-noise of the blizzard, we felt happy. Just to know there were other
-people near us—believe me, that was some relief!</p>
-
-<p>Far off up the line we could make out the headlight of the Limited
-like a blinking, misty moon creeping toward us. Ben glanced at his
-semaphore levers. Down she bore on us, the din of her drivers muffled
-by snow.</p>
-
-<p>There was the thunder of moving tons, a blast of cinders against the
-tower windows, and a snaky line of black as the Pullmans flashed past
-under their white-caps. We watched her red tail-lights around the
-curve.</p>
-
-<p>“J-J, J-J, J-J,” clicked Ben, back at the table. And directly Hastings
-answered in the same lifeless style.</p>
-
-<p>“Limited just passed O. K.,” went on my side partner. “How are you
-feeling?”</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson’s wire-talk was worse than ever. “Fine,” he stuttered.
-“Maybe I can hold out. The damn thing’s always near me. It’s cold
-here. I’ve got my feet on the stove. Say, this stove is a joke. It’s
-so empty it’s going to cave in pretty soon. Wait a minute, let me try
-another shot.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing more. Not another word, though we took turns at the key. And
-when Ben relighted his pipe I didn’t like the look on his face. “Jim,”
-he began, “there’s things in this world none of us can understand. I
-reckon after all that maybe, I misjudged Donaldson; perhaps he’s up
-against one of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quit!” I bellowed. “You watch yourself or you’ll be splitting a
-switch, too. As you said a while back, Donaldson’s nervous and cold.
-That’s what’s the matter with him; nothing else.”</p>
-
-<p>Ben, mumbling a reply, turned again to the window. If possible the
-storm was worse.</p>
-
-<p>I don’t exactly remember how it happened; I must have dozed off about
-then, being pretty tuckered out. Anyhow, the first thing I knew Ben
-was shaking the life out of me. I’ll never forget the expression of
-his face as I opened my eyes.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes were all red, his hands were working, his jaw set. “Wake up,
-Jim,” he hissed. “I heard it, too.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he went on as I instinctively looked toward the window. “Not
-there; over the wire. Listen!”</p>
-
-<p>I listened, but for a long time nothing broke the vibrating stillness
-of the tower. And I got to thinking it was another case of nerves.
-Then, Father above us! may I never again hear such a sound!</p>
-
-<p>Our instrument started to whisper. You laugh, do you? But if you’d
-been there you wouldn’t have laughed. We went over to the table on
-tiptoe, hardly daring to breathe. The little steel bar trembled; moved
-down; snapped back, barely closing the contact.</p>
-
-<p>It was like a dying man framing words he couldn’t utter. I followed in
-my mind the course of the single, drumming wire over the trestles,
-through the ravines, under the mountains. What manner of thing was
-pressing the key at the other end?</p>
-
-<p>Ben dropped forward with an oath and pillowed his elbows on the table
-as if his nearness might aid him. “Listen!” he begged. “Oh, Jim,
-<i>listen</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Presently the instrument quivered again, but this time the impulse was
-stronger. Horribly flaccid, monotonously regular, like the labored
-effort of an amateur, came the message which shall forever sear my
-memory with unspeakable horror.</p>
-
-<p>“God—in—heaven—help me. I—can’t—stand—this.
-They—chained—cross—ties—to—the—rails. They—will—ditch—the —Limited.
-I’m—done—for. Hell—is—nearer—now. Help. Dear—God—help—me—”</p>
-<p>That was all. Ben tore at the key, sending out into the night, “J-J,
-J-J, J-J,” until my head swam.</p>
-
-<p>But no response came; not the least flutter. Only agonizing, storm
-shrieking silence.</p>
-
-<p>Then he gave it up and staggered to his feet. His face was as gray as
-slate. “Jim,” he gasped, “Donaldson is dead! I know it. It was a dying
-man who sent that message.”</p>
-
-<p>I grabbed him by the shoulders. “You fool!” I yelled. “He can’t be
-dead—he sent it. Don’t you understand? They’re going to wreck the
-Limited. Donaldson was telling us. He <i>may</i> be wounded. We’ve got to
-get to him.”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, as if his body was awakening from sleep, the muscles in his
-shoulders under my hand tightened. “Sure, I get you,” he whispered.
-And before I knew what he was doing, he shook me off, rushing blindly
-for the stairs. “Come on, Jim. For God’s sake, hurry!” he called.
-“Bring my gun and some torpedoes. It’s only five miles by the road;
-thirty down the mountain by the track. Let’s try the car—”</p>
-
-<p>I stopped long enough to be sure the revolver we kept in a drawer was
-loaded, stuffed some torpedoes in my pocket, and followed him. Out
-into the gale he sped to where he kept his little second-hand,
-mud-spattered gas-wagon. I had always kidded him about it, laughed at
-it; but now I prayed.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, funny when you think of it, me praying! But I did—prayed it would
-run; prayed there was gas and oil in it.</p>
-
-<p>Once away from the lee of the building, the storm wrapped around us,
-flinging the snow in our faces, making us gasp for breath. We were
-taking desperate chances and breaking all rules—this leaving a tower
-vacant, but what could we do? What in God’s name could we do?</p>
-
-<p>When I caught up with Ben he was cranking the engine desperately. I
-propped the shanty door open, though the blast of wind threatened to
-fairly tear it from its hinges.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately the radiator of the car had antifreezing mixture in it.
-After an agonizing moment, the engine gave a couple of disgusted
-coughs and died. But Ben went right on. He spun that thing till I was
-dizzy as I sat with my hand on the throttle, feeding it raw gas.</p>
-
-<p>When there seemed no chance left, and I could see the Limited a
-burning, blackened mass, and hear the cries of the injured, the engine
-started, missing like thunder, to be sure. Ben leaped in beside me and
-let in his clutch.</p>
-
-<p>Once beyond the shanty our headlights ended in a whirling bank of
-snow, and the cold stabbed like a driven nail. But the engine was
-running better now.</p>
-
-<p>How my side partner found the road, or how he kept that rickety piece
-of junk from chucking us down a ravine I’ll never know. But he did.
-Yes, by the grace of the Lord, he did.</p>
-
-<p>Pitching like a ship in a storm, sinking now and then up to our hubs,
-we jounced on down that mountain. What everlasting miles of emptiness!
-What biting pain as our ears and hands and noses turned red, then
-white.</p>
-
-<p>Once we heard the shriek of the Limited below us on the grade; once we
-saw the flash of her furnace door. Seconds turned into minutes;
-minutes into hours. Would we be in time? I set my teeth and prayed
-some more.</p>
-
-<p>Ah, we had hit the last stretch and through the smother we could see
-the semaphore lights of Hastings station. Also the light in the
-building itself. Our car snorted and groaned as Ben fed it the gas,
-skidding to the edge of a precipice or flinging us half out of our
-seats, but we never thought of that.</p>
-
-<p>And now came the wail of the Limited’s whistle, this time above us.
-Her headlight flickered across the cut, touching the station with
-uncertain fingers. The semaphore was set green.</p>
-
-<p>I shivered, but not from cold. If only we had half a chance, but the
-everlasting snow—how it clung to our wheels! And under it our
-tire-chains spun gratingly in red clay which flecked the white of the
-road like blood.</p>
-
-<p>Bearing down on Hastings station, gathering speed with each pound of
-her drivers, thundered the Limited. We were playing the passage of a
-minute against a pile of cross-ties—and the forfeit was death!</p>
-
-<p>Now we reached the nearest point to the right-of-way, and as we jerked
-to a halt, a black figure appeared on the depot platform against the
-light. I saw the flash of a gun and heard a bullet sing past.</p>
-
-<p>But Ben paid no heed. Throwing himself from the car, he floundered
-over to the track. I ran toward the station, firing as I went. Once I
-looked back. Ben was kneeling down, adjusting torpedoes under the very
-pilot of the plow.</p>
-
-<p>Now there isn’t any use of my explaining how the Limited roared by,
-her engineer satisfied with the green of the semaphore; nor how he
-gave her the air when the torpedoes warned him.</p>
-
-<p>Nor, for that matter, of the futile pursuit of the bandits who had
-intended to ditch her. All that came out in the morning paper. If I
-remember, there was even a picture of the pile of cross-ties chained
-to the track.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that will interest you is what we discovered in Hastings
-station. Without bothering to explain to 77’s wondering crew, we
-dashed into the waiting-room and threw open the door of the ticket
-office.</p>
-
-<p>At the table sat Donaldson. He was stiff and rigid, and from an ugly
-blotched hole in his neck there crept a frozen stream of blood. His
-right hand still rested on the telegraph-key.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” I muttered. “Dead! He never moved after he was shot.”</p>
-
-<p>And then, somehow feeling Ben’s eyes upon me, I looked at him. His
-smile was ghastly.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure?” he said. “I told you so back in the tower. He never moved
-after he was shot? Then what about that message? How did he know about
-the cross-ties?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up!” I shrieked. “Here, let’s get him out of this. We’ll go down
-on 77. I’m through!”</p>
-
-<div class="tn">
- <p style='text-indent:0'>Transcriber’s Note: This story appeared in
- the January 31, 1920 issue of <i>All-Story Weekly</i> magazine.</p>
-</div>
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